I know Trestman's not a marquee hire, but it's not like he doesn't have any NFL experience or success. He's been an offensive coordinator a number of times. In his two years with San Fran they were 1st and 3rd in points scored. He helped coach a Jake Plummer lead Cardinals team to the playoffs, and he was the offensive coordinator in Oakland the year the Raiders made the superbowl.

I know Trestman's not a marquee hire, but it's not like he doesn't have any NFL experience or success. He's been an offensive coordinator a number of times. In his two years with San Fran they were 1st and 3rd in points scored. He helped coach a Jake Plummer lead Cardinals team to the playoffs, and he was the offensive coordinator in Oakland the year the Raiders made the superbowl.

I know Trestman's not a marquee hire, but it's not like he doesn't have any NFL experience or success. He's been an offensive coordinator a number of times. In his two years with San Fran they were 1st and 3rd in points scored. He helped coach a Jake Plummer lead Cardinals team to the playoffs, and he was the offensive coordinator in Oakland the year the Raiders made the superbowl.

In San Fran, he just stepped in to a stacked offense that had already been together with the same system that they'd had for years.

That Plummer-led Arizona team was one of the luckiest of all time. Plummer threw more picks than TDs and had a terribad YPA. The offense was 15th in the league. Their point differential was -53, which would put their record around 6-10 or 7-9 historically.

He took over Gruden's offense in Oakland and ran Gruden's plays. In the Super Bowl, he used Gruden's own playcalling script so that Gruden knew what he was calling before he called it. The Raiders lost because of it.

The last thing he did of note in the NFL was in 2002. That's so long ago that it's before the Patriots' second super bowl ring. It's the same season that Marc Bulger got his first start. It was the Texans' first year in existence. It was Brady's first year as a good QB. Brandon Weeden was barely old enough to buy cigarettes, and he's like 70 years old. David Carr was a brand-new #1 overall pick. Reggie Wayne had 27 career receptions going into that season. I have to look it up, but I think there were still dinosaurs and cavemen and ****.

So the guy can run teams offensive personnel put together by other people using the other people's offensive systems. The Bears may as well have interviewed Gruden, since half of Trestman's success was just babysitting what he built.

...and any coach who still thinks Tim Tebow should be a professional QB needs to be dragged out behind the barn and shot.

On his own website, he has a nice little page about how he's a QB "guru." Here is a screenshot of his entire list of "successes:"

I wouldn't be sir prized if he passed McCoy on the depth chart. I think he might have a better arm and accurate arm then him from the highlights I thought. He also got some wheels too help us prepare for QB's as Wilson , RG3 and other runners etc.

Its Martz all over without the 5 receiver sets. Indy had quite possibly an even worse OL than the bears and a rookie QB, but let's chuck it 30 Yards downfield each time. Big Ben looks to be breaking down from all the hits that he took and you want Arians to be your Head Coach? With your OL. Good luck with that.

In San Fran, he just stepped in to a stacked offense that had already been together with the same system that they'd had for years.

That Plummer-led Arizona team was one of the luckiest of all time. Plummer threw more picks than TDs and had a terribad YPA. The offense was 15th in the league. Their point differential was -53, which would put their record around 6-10 or 7-9 historically.

He took over Gruden's offense in Oakland and ran Gruden's plays. In the Super Bowl, he used Gruden's own playcalling script so that Gruden knew what he was calling before he called it. The Raiders lost because of it.

The last thing he did of note in the NFL was in 2002. That's so long ago that it's before the Patriots' second super bowl ring. It's the same season that Marc Bulger got his first start. It was the Texans' first year in existence. It was Brady's first year as a good QB. Brandon Weeden was barely old enough to buy cigarettes, and he's like 70 years old. David Carr was a brand-new #1 overall pick. Reggie Wayne had 27 career receptions going into that season. I have to look it up, but I think there were still dinosaurs and cavemen and ****.

So the guy can run teams offensive personnel put together by other people using the other people's offensive systems. The Bears may as well have interviewed Gruden, since half of Trestman's success was just babysitting what he built.

...and any coach who still thinks Tim Tebow should be a professional QB needs to be dragged out behind the barn and shot.

On his own website, he has a nice little page about how he's a QB "guru." Here is a screenshot of his entire list of "successes:"

It's funny that you knock everything the guy has done. He just happen to be in the right place at the right time over and over and over again. What about winning the gray cup in back to back years? Who's playbook did he ripoff? Being a OC is not just about your playbook.... It's about knowing what plays to call in games. He's shown that he can have great offensives in the NFL over and over and over again.

Its Martz all over without the 5 receiver sets. Indy had quite possibly an even worse OL than the bears and a rookie QB, but let's chuck it 30 Yards downfield each time. Big Ben looks to be breaking down from all the hits that he took and you want Arians to be your Head Coach? With your OL. Good luck with that.

You have to chuck it when you're always behind, and Indy was.

He didn't chuck it 30 yards all the time in Pittsburgh. He had a running game in Pittsburgh and used it, too.

Not sure why you think Big Ben's breaking down because of hits. His missed time this year was from a rib injury caused by one particular hit. Last year, he missed one game because of an ankle injury sustained on one particular hit. In 2010, his only missed time was due to him acting all rapey. He hasn't missed any games because of injuries that developed over time and he's still playing at a high level...?

It's funny that you knock everything the guy has done. He just happen to be in the right place at the right time over and over and over again. What about winning the gray cup in back to back years? Who's playbook did he ripoff? Being a OC is not just about your playbook.... It's about knowing what plays to call in games. He's shown that he can have great offensives in the NFL over and over and over again.

He's had two successful offenses in the NFL. Both were short stints handed to him fully ready. The ONLY thing he had to do was call plays. How is that "over and over?" Hell, half of one of his stints was a failure. After both stints, no team in the NFL elected to give him a coordinator or HC spot in the offseason when he was let go. Goes to show you what the NFL thought of his coaching.

As for the grey cups...I don't get it? Canadian football barely resembles NFL football as far as offense goes. The stuff you can do is sillier than the arena league. Might as well bring in Phil Jackson just because he knows how to lead people and deal with divas. Basketball's prerty different from the NFL, too.

For christ's sake, you get unlimited men in motion. Two of your receivers can even run in motion TOWARD the line of scrimmage to get to full speed before the snap.

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I dont even understand why all those people he helped to coach is a bad thing. It is not like he could continue to coach them and he was the reason those people were ******* horrible in the NFL.

JJust pointing out that every QB he claims as one of his success stories basically suck...ipso facto...he's not nearly as good a QB consultant as people say.

He didn't chuck it 30 yards all the time in Pittsburgh. He had a running game in Pittsburgh and used it, too.

Not sure why you think Big Ben's breaking down because of hits. His missed time this year was from a rib injury caused by one particular hit. Last year, he missed one game because of an ankle injury sustained on one particular hit. In 2010, his only missed time was due to him acting all rapey. He hasn't missed any games because of injuries that developed over time and he's still playing at a high level...?

Sure Indy was in a ton of close games and had no other talent. But is having a rookie throw 627 times behind a OL of discards really worth it? When no one in the building cares about Wins or Losses this year?

Big Ben looked bad against SF last year because of that injury, missed the St.Louis game, nearly lost to Seneca Wallace averaging 4.3 yards/attempt in the season finale and got Tebowed while clearly looking hobbled and a shell of himself. This year same story, Start like MVP, have an injury and look bad at the end of the year. Sure some of it is him trying to unnecessarily extend plays but some of it taking a lot of deepshots against a sub par OL. They hired Haley and drafted OL with first 2 picks specifically to run the ball. They felt Ben was taking too many shots.

I just think its a horrible scheme fit for what the Bears already have. Even if you draft OL this year, they typically run block much better early on than pass protect. Is that bad to have scheme that is more balanced and gets RBs involved in the pass game and takes selective deep shots rather than throw the ball 600-650 times, have Cutler miss games(2 out of 3 years with big injuries and a concussion this year) while trying to recreate the 2008 Broncos?

Maybe its just me, but it seems like kind of a weak year for hiring HC's. I think Roman would be a good hire and the Jags/Chargers could go after him. I also like Andy Reid but he was obviously already taken by KC. Indifferent on Marrone and Chudzinski. Nobody else besides Roman really excites me as a fan (young, innovative with good x's and o's knowledge, either on offense or defense) except for maybe Ray Horton.

Seems like a weak field when Marc Trestman is getting serious interest. And 5 teams still have vacancies at this time.

I hope this Gus Bradley thing gets finalized because I don't think he's getting enough love as a HC candidate.

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Originally Posted by 49erNation85

I wouldn't be sir prized if he passed McCoy on the depth chart. I think he might have a better arm and accurate arm then him from the highlights I thought. He also got some wheels too help us prepare for QB's as Wilson , RG3 and other runners etc.

Maybe its just me, but it seems like kind of a weak year for hiring HC's. I think Roman would be a good hire and the Jags/Chargers could go after him. I also like Andy Reid but he was obviously already taken by KC. Indifferent on Marrone and Chudzinski. Nobody else besides Roman really excites me as a fan (young, innovative with good x's and o's knowledge, either on offense or defense) except for maybe Ray Horton.

Seems like a weak field when Marc Trestman is getting serious interest. And 5 teams still have vacancies at this time.

Having a crush on Marc Trestman is just a GM being dumb; it's not really indicative of the strength of the field. There are a lot of good candidates out there. ..good candidates that Phil Emery seems intent on ignoring. You know, just like upgrades for his offensive line.

Maybe Henry Burris will come back to the US, too. All these teams need QBs and he threw 43 TDs last season (tied with Drew Brees for the most of all "pro" players!). I hear doing well in Canadian football translates really well to the NFL at least 2% of the time!